China's provinces: Mapping the way forward

Transcription

1 Total China Research Briefing Emerging markets June 11, 215 Author Hannah Levinger* Editor Maria Laura Lanzeni Deutsche Bank AG Frankfurt am Main Germany Fax: DB Research Management Ralf Hoffmann China's provinces Mapping the way forward This article introduces an update to our interactive macro chartbook for China s 31 provinces. 1 New series covering province-level snapshots on property markets, local government finances and regional competitiveness offer a meaningful extension to the existing macroeconomic toolbox. Five years have passed since our report China s provinces: Digging one layer deeper, and much has happened: China has embarked on a path of economic rebalancing, away from the legacy of an investment boom and towards more sustainable growth. The changes that come with this shift hold implications for all provinces, but the challenges may look quite different in steel-producing than in real-estate-reliant. Perhaps not surprisingly, we find the provinces in the northeastern rust belt are most exposed to the current China slowdown. Provincial finances are at the root of China s fiscal risks, stemming from an overreliance on local governments income from land sales and a mismatch between local responsibilities for managing revenues and expenditures. Recent measures to expand local government bond financing are a positive step towards reducing fiscal risks and accumulation of debt at the local level. Property markets are feeling the squeeze across China, as prices have come under pressure, and property sales and investment have slowed or declined, particularly in the northeastern provinces. But the diversity of local markets is huge and so are the chances to adequately respond to the sector s problems. Finally, China s ambitions to expand cross-border trade and investment via the new silk road should benefit provinces at the western and southwestern borders more than others. However, convergence of the living standards in some of these provinces to those in the richer ones still has a long way to go. Provincial real GDP growth has slowed to a fraction of its peak DX Diff. from peak (pp) *The author would like to thank Karolina Kuzminskyte for her valuable research assistance. 1 Covering 22 provinces, 5 autonomous regions, 4 directly controlled municipalities, but excluding special administrative regions Hong Kong and Macao.

2 Growth targets reduced across the board in China 1 Real GDP growth, % 214, actual 214, target 215, target no target Tibet China Source: Various news reports Moving closer to each other 3 GDP per capita, % deviation from nat. avg Coast North South Central Northeast West Slowdown most pronounced in previous provincial growth stars Real GDP growth has moderated considerably across China s provinces. In 214, growth rates were lower by 5.4 percentage points on average compared to their peak levels in (chart on page 1). Economic growth has proven relatively resilient in the coastal provinces such as, and. Growth rates slumped most in the Northeast s rust belt provinces of, and energy-producing (where one of China s largest oilfields is located), and in those reliant on bulk materials such as and. The island province of also slowed from a peak of 16%, albeit less sharply than the commodity producers. Notably, inland provinces which experienced bumper growth rates during the global financial crisis (when export-dependent coastal provinces were hard hit) now face the largest loss in momentum. For the city-states and, the slowdown has been much more orderly. Also, the poorer provinces of, Tibet and continued to record high growth rates in 214. All 31 provinces have slashed their growth targets for this year (chart 1). abandoned a target altogether, in line with China s overall pursuit of more quality-driven growth. China's provinces by region 2 Source: Evident convergence in provincial incomes per capita The big Go West infrastructure push has been successful in lifting per capita GDP in less wealthy provinces. As a result, discrepancies in provincial income have declined in recent years (chart 3). Yet, the gaps remain considerable, and the growth slowdown of recent years which has struck hardest in the resourcerich or heavy-polluting provinces but also affected the poorer South and West will put a (temporary) brake on GDP convergence. Despite their large and diverse challenges, China s provinces have a few success stories to tell. Urbanisation has made rapid progress in underdeveloped regions. Transport infrastructure has expanded massively, with the result that China now boasts more than 1, km of expressways (chart 4) and the largest network of high-speed railways (chart 5). Furthermore, foreign direct investment has been lured into inland regions, and third-tier cities such as Leshan located in province or Yulin in are poised to account for the largest increase in China s upper middle-class 2 June 11, 215 Research Briefing

3 Tausende Crisis stimulus drove infrastructure expansion 4 Expressways, km ' Central South West, excl. Tibet Coast North Northeast population by 222, reaching 3% of China s total middle class from just 15% in Manufacturing hubs have emerged outside the traditional powerhouses along the Pearl and Yangtze deltas. That is because unit labour costs in the manufacturing sector remain the highest along the coast. 3 But inland provinces are catching up fast. Nevertheless, some provinces like, and have retained low unit labour costs that enable them to compete with countries such as Thailand, the Philippines and Vietnam. Moreover, China s ambitious plans to expand investment and trade in Asia and globally via the new silk road economic belt importantly include China s domestic provinces in the Southwest and West (via the -- Europe international railway) as well as coastal provinces for the maritime route connecting China and Europe. Provinces close to the national or sea border are well placed to benefit from expanding cross-border trade and investment thanks to existing infrastructure, new transport links and easing regulations. Railways expanded in remote regions or strategic hubs 5 km, ' Total (right axis) Sources: Ministry of Transport, Retail sales still grow at robust rates Sources: Provincial and municipal statistics bureaus, Provincial growth remains dependent on investment Most provinces continue to rely heavily on investment as the key engine of growth. Gross fixed capital formation, a proxy of investment, averaged 64% of GDP across the provinces in 213 the highest level in a decade. The rate of final consumption as a proportion of GDP by contrast averaged 34% and remained largely stable over the same period. Retail sales, a higher-frequency indicator capturing private consumption dynamics, provide a mixed picture. Sales of consumer goods have slowed over the past years in all parts of the country but most provinces still record robust rates (chart 6). In particular inland provinces sales were buoyed by demand for high-tech consumer goods. The slowdown in retail sales has been most pronounced in northern China, where real GDP growth moderated from more than 12% in 211 to 7.3% in 214. Retail sales growth notably decelerated in, and remained subdued in and, which can in part be attributed to restrictions imposed in the real estate sector. By contrast, overreliance on investment is evidenced across China s provinces by the rapid growth in capital spending in recent years. Indeed, investment in fixed assets, which includes land purchases, 4 expanded by 24% p.a. on average in In 214, by contrast, investment grew at a much slower rate in the majority of Chinese provinces (chart 7). But even then, all but four provinces continued to post double-digit expansion. By sector, 5 the slowdown in fixed asset investment was led by manufacturing, which slackened across the country and declined sharply in coastal manufacturing hub. Mining-related investment remained buoyant in, and but fell in other resource-rich provinces such as and. Real estate investment, which accounted for a quarter of total fixed investment on average across the provinces, rose moderately in most provinces, but dropped sharply in, and. Moreover, lower investment in upstream industries (cement, steel, construction materials) contributed to a slowdown in other areas of investment in the supplier provinces McKinsey (213). Mapping China s middle class. EIU (214). Still making it An analysis of manufacturing labour costs in China. Dec 214. Defined by NBS as construction projects and purchases of fixed assets (incl. fees) with planned investment totalling at least RMB 5 m in urban and rural areas but excluding rural households. Data available until 213 only. 3 June 11, 215 Research Briefing

4 Tibet Property price decline sharpest in the Northeast Central North South Coast Northeast West Fixed asset investment growth slowed in the majority of provinces Fixed asset investment, average (left) Fixed asset investment, 214 (left) Gross fixed capital formation, % of GDP (right) Property prices decline across regions 9 Residential property price index (7 cities), No. of cities experiencing change on yoy basis Coast down Central down North/-east down South/West down All flat Coast up Central up North/-east up South/West up Monthly dynamics hint at nascent recovery 1 Residential property price index (7 cities), No. of cities experiencing change on mom basis Coast down North/-east down All flat Central up South/West up Central down South/West down Coast up North/-east up At the same time, the central government moved ahead with cutting excess capacities in related industrial sectors, e.g. by shutting down unprofitable steel mills and aluminium smelters in, and. 6 These measures have served the double purpose of cutting inefficiencies and reducing air pollution. However, the aim to curb China s heavy reliance on fixed investment stands in sharp contrast to province-level fixed investment growth targets at around 2% that have been upheld for 215 in a number of provinces, including, and. 7 Property markets: Different provinces, different challenges The property market has been at the forefront of China hard-landing concerns. Falling real estate prices and sales, slowing land sales and stalling urbanisation rates pose a drag to the real economy and bear risks for the financial sector, given the high linkages between local government finances and real estate developments. But China s ability to withstand a sustained correction in the property market comes down to the local level. Due to the sheer size of the country there are not one but many property markets that may face quite different supply and demand trends and require differentiated policy responses. Given the highly diverse nature of urban and rural settlements within China, price trends are generally measured on a city level rather than by province. The widely used 7-city index encompasses the large municipalities as well as subprovincial and prefecture-level cities. First-tier cities such as,,, Shenzhen and Guangzhou have generally witnessed above-average price increases while the correction has been orderly as demand held up well. By contrast, second-tier cities have faced much larger price variations. Despite considerable differences between local markets, the fall in property prices has been visible across regions (chart 9). Cities located in the Northeast, North and along the coast were among the first to experience year-on-year price declines. The drop has also been much sharper than, for example, in cities located in China s West. Since November 214 no more than three cities included in the index recorded price increases on a year-on-year basis two of which are located on China s coast and one being the fast growing capital of central province, Zhengzhou, once famous for being home to China s largest ghost city. 6 7 Various news reports. Financial Times. Chinese provinces turn to old investment and easing playbook. Feb 16, June 11, 215 Research Briefing

5 China total Vacancy rates rose in second-tier cities 11 Ratio of vacant-to-completed floor space Changsha Dalian Nanjing Qingdao Wuhan Chengdu Hangzhou Ningbo Shenyang On a monthly basis, a turnaround in property prices has started to become visible in and Shenzhen after a series of measures to boost demand, as well as in southern provinces cities (chart 1). The downturn in the property market has brought about incremental relaxation of restrictions, not just in and. Plans for nationwide residential property taxes were shelved and home-purchase restrictions reversed, some of which had been in place since 21. Moreover, the government introduced financial incentives to boost sales; further easing of mortgage restrictions were rolled out in April 215 and minimum down-payment ratios were slashed in several cities. Vacancy rates (the ratio of vacant space relative to completed floor space) have risen across China s provinces over the past few years. In several provinces, vacancy rates 8 doubled between 211 and 213 (the last point for which vacant floor space data are available). Floor area waiting to be sold compared to completed property area surged notably in, and provinces. On a city level, the increase occurred most rapidly in second-tier cities (chart 11) but also several larger cities such as and Shenzhen, while the trend for tier-3 cities is more divergent, ranging from skyrocketing vacancy rates in island city Haikou to declining rates in Hefei and Jinan. Vacancy rates have declined somewhat in as construction activity (measured by the completion of floor space) rebounded and homes were sold faster than elsewhere. Comparing completion across cities and provinces provides a more nuanced picture for 214. It shows construction activity stalled or reversed in some provinces where vacancy rates were elevated (,, ) but continued to flourish in others (,, ), implying different dynamics (chart 12). High vacancy rates not necessarily a sign of slowing construction activity 12 Real estate investment dynamics differ 13, (214) Note: Refers to investment in residential real estate. Tibet is excluded due to excessive growth from a very low base Completed floor space, (left) Vacancy rate (right) Note: Tibet is an outlier and excluded in the chart due to very high growth in completed floor area from a very low base. Completed floor space data refers to 214 while vacancy rate refers to 213. Real estate investment in residential buildings generally continued to grow on a year-on-year basis at end-214, despite already declining prices and sales (chart 13). Where the gap between high investment and falling prices is large, future funding may be called into question. Exceptions are the three provinces in the Northeast (,, and ) as well as resource-rich and, where property investment contracted sharply in line with the overall investment decline in the region. Strikingly these were among the provinces to still record year-on-year increases in residential home prices. In sum, while the property market shows signs of sluggishness everywhere, the underlying dynamics can be very different as summarised in chart 14. For Refers to commodity buildings, i.e. housing for sale on private market in urban areas. 5 June 11, 215 Research Briefing

7 Budget revenue growth slowed everywhere 15 Tibet CAGR 21-12, % 214, * Tibet: latest is 213. Refers to budgetary revenues before transfers. Double whammy: Some provinces rely on real estate for land sales revenue & taxes 16 Real estate related tax, % of total tax revenue 25 HA CQ FU 2 AN LI TJ GD SD HB HU GU BE JS 15 HN IM HE JX SI NX SH HJ SX JL ZJ 1 SA YU XJ GA GZ 5 QI TI Land sales share, % of provincial revenues AN=, BE=, CQ=, FU=, GA=, GD=, GU=, GZ=, HA=, HE=, HJ=, HN=, HB=, HU=, IM=, JS=, JX=, JL=, LI=, NX=, QI=, SA=, SD=, SH=, SX=, SI=, TJ=, TI=Tibet, XJ=, YU=, ZJ= OECD, Provincial finances: Fiscal risks related to high reliance on land sales Tightly linked to the developments in the property market is the health of provinces fiscal balance sheets. Local governments finances are subject to an inherent mismatch between centralised revenue generation and local spending responsibilities. 9 This mismatch is illustrated by the fact that the share of local to total fiscal expenditures (71% at end-214) far exceeds the share of local to total revenues (59% at end-214), and is also much higher than in developed countries. 1 As a result, local governments have resorted to off-budget funds and land sales for propping up budget revenues, while expenditures remained highly localised, and often channelled through special purpose vehicles. This imbalance became more apparent in recent years as budgetary performance deteriorated. All provinces faced significantly slower growth in budget revenues in 214, relative to previous years (chart 15). Among the provinces that saw the sharpest revenue drop are rust belt and as well as coal producer and relatively poor provinces such as and Tibet. Besides their budgetary fiscal incomes, China s provincial governments draw on off-budget income from government-managed funds. Fund revenues account for 4% of total revenues at the local level, making them a key source for provincial spending. Crucially, 85% of government fund revenues are derived from the sale of state-owned land use rights. Land sales slowed significantly in 214 as a result of lack of demand for land and sluggish real estate development. This trend continued into the first four months of 215 when land sales revenues declined sharply from the previous year. At the provincial level, fund income as a proxy for land sales revenues slowed or declined in the majority of provinces in 214, though the magnitude differs widely. 11 Only a few provinces, including and, continued to post year-on-year increases thanks to ongoing investment demand and targeted government efforts to boost sales. Concomitantly, total revenue growth slowed more sharply where land sales declined most. 12 faced both the sharpest decline in land sales and negative budget revenue growth., and saw double-digit contractions in land sales coupled with marked decelerations in budget revenue growth. Moreover, budgetary income sources such as tax revenues may also depend quite strongly on the real estate market (e.g. through land appreciation tax, farmland occupation tax and deed tax) or are little diversified altogether, hence revealing provinces sensitivity to a double-whammy effect from a property market downturn on local finances (chart 16). This includes, for example, and, as well as primarily coastal provinces. For 215, China targets a wider fiscal deficit on both the central and local government levels so as to accommodate for more subdued economic activity. The budget estimates that local government revenues will grow at only 7.5 from 1 in 214 and land sales income will fall by 4.7 (chart 17). 13 At the same time, the central government s fiscal capacity to smooth shortfalls on the local level is substantial. Owing to the system of interregional transfers, local governments that run budget deficits receive net transfers and tax rebates from the central government while those with budget surpluses remit funds back to the centre. In recent years, operating budgets have diminished in many provinces, thus driving up reliance on transfers from the centre. 9 See also our Feb 21 study China s provinces: Digging one layer deeper for more detailed background on the topic. 1 Lu and Sun (213). Local government financing platforms in China. IMF WP/13/ Ministry of Finance, press release. 去 年 土 地 出 让 收 入 增 幅 回 落 Mar 25, Moody s (215). Chinese regional and local land sales slowed sharply in 214. Mar National People s Congress. Report on the implementation of the central and local budgets for 214 and on the central and local draft budgets for June 11, 215 Research Briefing

8 China, total Tibet Tibet Land sales' decline acts as a drag on local finances * Budgetary fiscal revenue Budgetary fiscal expenditure Off-budget fund revenue Off-budget fund expenditure Land sales revenue * As per draft budget. Note that some fund items are reallocated to budgetary accounts from 215 onwards Sources: China Economic Monitoring and Analysis Centre, National People's Congress, Provinces ability to cope with these fiscal challenges differs, not just due to varying degrees of revenue diversification and reliance on land sales for funding. It also depends on their availability of (liquid) assets, for example in the form of stakes in state-owned enterprises which could be sold in case of financial distress. An S&P report shows that only a small share (less than 15%) of assets needed to be sold to generate an additional 2% of operating revenues in the coastal provinces,, and, whereas and as well as the remote province of would have to sell more than 7% of their assets. 14 Shadow banking most prominent in richer provinces Financing of real estate and infrastructure projects is a local responsibility. Confronted with the dilemma to fund centrally-induced investment increases while being banned from direct issuance of debt, local governments either relied on the central government to issue bonds on their behalf or resorted extensively to off-budget channels, i.e. special purpose local government financing vehicles (LGFVs), which in turn borrowed from banks, wealth management products (WMPs), trusts or the bond market. With concerns about the lack of transparency and fiscal risks as well as the higher borrowing costs 15 associated with informal local financing mounting, regulations on LGFVs and WMPs tightened on a provincial and national level in the course of 214. LGFVs in turn have faced deteriorating finances. 16 province imposed a ban on new debt issues by LGFVs altogether. 17 China s fiscal reform plans have followed the open the front door, close the back door approach to steer local government financing away from LGFVs and the shadow-banking sector and towards direct borrowing on the bond market. In the face of the growth slowdown, however, the back door will not (yet) shut completely. LGFVs remain a powerful funding tool, as the recent decision by the Chinese government to resurrect bank support to existing LGFV projects and prop up local governments spending ability shows. 18 Shadow financing declined but not uniformly across provinces 18 Richer provinces rely more on shadow products for financing 19 Shadow banking*, % of total aggregate financing Net new financing (214), RMB bn 1,4 1,2 1, *Includes bankers acceptance bills, trusts and entrusted loans. Sources: People's Bank of China, Shadow banking Corporate bond and equity financing Sources: People's Bank of China, Bank loans (in FCY and LCY) Other Enforcement of stricter rules has already yielded results. On a national level, non-bank or shadow financing (via bankers acceptance bills, trust products and entrusted loans) as a share of total credit flows declined from 3% in S&P (214). China credit spotlight: Speedy reforms of public finance are key to provincial governments creditworthiness, Nov 19, LGFV borrowing costs are on average twice as high as government bond yields. See also Zhang and Barnett (214). Fiscal vulnerabilities and risks from local government finance in China. IMF. 16 See also (215). China s unexpected fiscal slide, Jan 5, People s government of website. 18 (215). China: Another significant sign of fiscal policy easing, May 15, June 11, 215 Research Briefing

9 West South Northeast North Coast Central Which are most highly indebted provinces? 2 % of provincial GDP (as of mid-213) Top 2 sub-national bond issuers 21 By amount outstanding, RMB bn (as of May 215) municipality province municipality municipality Chonqing municipality province province province province province province province City of Wuhan province province province Free Trade Zone Highway Highway Hefei municipality Local debt with full repayment obligation Explicitly guaranteed debt Contingent liabilities Sources: OECD, Provincial audit offices, Note: Includes sub-national government and LGFV bond issuers by ultimate parent. Sources: Bloomberg Finance LLP, to 18% in 214. The shadow-banking share has also fallen on the local level in the majority of provinces (charts 18 and 19), except in and as well as (due to trust loans) and, both of which had also accumulated high debt levels (see next section). Richer provinces, like and, are the provinces with the largest shadow banking market in terms of value and share in total financing. While non-bank financing has been reined in to a negligible or even negative contribution to net new financing in a number of coastal provinces (e.g. in and ), it remained largely stable in, and. A new market in the making: Local government bonds Local governments have accumulated significant debt. At end-june 213 the most recent figure available national audit results revealed a stock of RMB 1.9 tr of debt owed by regional and local governments directly plus explicit and indirect guarantees amounting to RMB 7 tr, in total around one-third of China s GDP. As a share of GDP, this figure does not strike one as particularly high, yet local debt rose by more than 6% between 21 and mid-213 to amount to more than half of China s total general government debt. 19 Broken down by province, the ratio of debt to provincial GDP reached as high as 8% in the case of while central and some coastal provinces boasted a debt share below 2% of provincial GDP as of mid-213 (chart 2). In addition, there are provinces like and that handed out extensive guarantees at an amount that matched actual local debt obligations. An update of provincial debt data, announced for spring 215, is yet to be released. So far, only one province,, has disclosed more up-to-date numbers. They indicate a 22% increase in RMB terms between June 213 and December 214, reaching 49% of GDP. Owing to the massive borrowing for urban construction, transport and land acquisition, a substantial share of local governments debt burden is linked to infrastructure development and the property sector. By mid-213, LGFVs accounted for approx. 39% of the National Audit Office s RMB 17.9 tr debt estimate or 12% of GDP obligations for which local governments bear ultimate payment responsibility given their arm s length borrowing through LGFV platforms. 2 More than RMB 5 tr of bonds issued by LGFVs and local governments will mature up to 225, as data compiled from Bloomberg Finance LLP show. Even though the provinces and municipalities are the largest issuers by volume of bonds outstanding (chart 21), direct issuance by provincial (and municipal) governments accounts for less than one-fifth of the total. The overwhelming majority of bond obligations is owed by government-managed investment and infrastructure companies. That is despite the fact that LGFVs dominant borrowing method has been via short-term bank loans and trust products. Crucially, LGFVs ability to refinance varies widely. According to a 214 audit of local government finance, 2% of new loans taken out by local governments were used to repay older debt. 21 The formal launch of the local government debt-for-bond swap programme in March 215 marks a key step towards improving local government finances (see timeline in chart 23). Local governments received permission to convert RMB 1 tr of short-term debt (mostly LGFV bonds) into lower-interest and longerterm municipal or provincial bonds. In May 215, became the first province to issue municipal bonds under the new debt-for-bond swap plan, at rates only slightly above the central government s Treasury bond rate. 22 In June 215, the quota for local government swaps was doubled to RMB 2 tr. The 19 Local debt includes obligations by provinces, prefectures, counties and townships. 2 OECD Economic Survey. Mar 215, p McKinsey Global Institute. Debt and (not much) deleveraging. Feb China Daily. issues USD 8 bn municipal bonds. May 19, June 11, 215 Research Briefing

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